research

Quantum gauge boson propagators in the light front

Abstract

Gauge fields in the light front are traditionally addressed via the employment of an algebraic condition nA=0n\cdot A=0 in the Lagrangian density, where AμA_{\mu} is the gauge field (Abelian or non-Abelian) and nμn^\mu is the external, light-like, constant vector which defines the gauge proper. However, this condition though necessary is not sufficient to fix the gauge completely; there still remains a residual gauge freedom that must be addressed appropriately. To do this, we need to define the condition (nA)(A)=0(n\cdot A)(\partial \cdot A)=0 with nA=0=An\cdot A=0=\partial \cdot A. The implementation of this condition in the theory gives rise to a gauge boson propagator (in momentum space) leading to conspicuous non-local singularities of the type (kn)α(k\cdot n)^{-\alpha} where α=1,2\alpha=1,2. These singularities must be conveniently treated, and by convenient we mean not only matemathically well-defined but physically sound and meaningfull as well. In calculating such a propagator for one and two noncovariant gauge bosons those singularities demand from the outset the use of a prescription such as the Mandelstam-Leibbrandt (ML) one. We show that the implementation of the ML prescription does not remove certain pathologies associated with zero modes. However we present a causal, singularity-softening prescription and show how to keep causality from being broken without the zero mode nuisance and letting only the propagation of physical degrees of freedom.Comment: 10 page

    Similar works